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ORIGINALCORRESPONDENCE
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FROM FRIDAy NIGHT'S GAZETTE, March 30 BANKRUPTS. I
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Further on , he asserts i » liDy that the CbiwelVafiTe leaders are now called upon by the people of Englaiji Ireland , and Scotland , to reasKune the reins of government . TiasvugAt be true , but we should lie to see it tried , we shonld like to see Parliament fiisolTed , and a new House chosen by the free * nH nnrestrained Suffrage of the whole people of those three kingdom ? . £ et ihis be done , and if the Conserrative leaders still find themselves called on to Teassnme the government of the country , we will ifcen admit that Fraser . has spoken in the spirit of prophecy . Bat the tetm " people" in Eraser ' s dictionary , of course , means only " the thousands and tens of tboiBands" banded together in Conservative Associations / ' We suppose par excellence the " Ootrative Conservative Associations , " and , as
Pan would say " aboveallandbefore all" theieafe Association bearing that respectable and consistant toubriqtuite , which nas displayed its operative munificence in an expence of several , hundreds of pounds , for a wooden hovel , in which to shelter from the rahiiteselecfcpatron , the recreantBadical . Alwayskeeping to this "Conservative" and " Constitutional " meaning of the term " people , " Eraser goes on to review the present position of afiairs , and proceeds to cive the * people " some sonnd and useful advice , in every word of which we heartily concur , and to every sentiment of which we cheerfully respond , premising that by the term - people" tee have bo oracalar hocus poens reservation of meaning , but mean amply and fully what we say ; with these extracts , then , we conclude our notice of this clever and well written , though exceedingly deceptions ,
article . .. - ~ To the people then we say , Learn from the past to confide more in your principles , and yourselves , than your leaders ; * and , above all , look with bope to the apparent working of Providence as rpgariLs the destinies of yonr native land . There are bright streaks viable in the horizon , —there are indications of thebpst description . In such a state of society as ours , it is of more importance to observe what the people themselves are doing , —than / what their political leaders are planning . In political matters let the people cling to their principles —maintain boldly their principles —advocate , constantly and extensively , but temperately their priiiciplet ; and let them bear the trite but wholesome adage constantly in mind , that " Magna esi ferilas , elpreevalebif . " .
Let th « n , however , always beware of doubtful characters of trimming politicians , of " liberal Conservatives , " the modern Sphinxes , with human ri * affes joined with the bodies of brutes . Let them always demand of any one who claims favour and confidence at their nands , whether his news are clear and con . -dstent on fundamental points . Two or three leading principles , at least , ought to be kept constantly in view ; and every candidate for public favour tested by them- Butj further , while the people relv peacefully on their principles , let them for the triumph of those principles , depend , under God ' s blessinr . mjuxly ox their owx exeutioxs . " Of the literary articles " The Yellow Plush Correspondence" is amusing , but terribly overstrained . . " Our Club at Paris * ' is a sillv thing .
The long dissertation on Railroads will require more rime for a careful reading than we can afford this wtrtk . t ; Ensign 0 "Donoghu £ 's Packet from Belgium " I « - irresistibly comic in several of its scenes and situations The character of Coffy , the Irish servant , is finely drawn . There are some other pieces which we have not had t ime to read . - - "
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Life ix London . — I had been about twelve months ** upon town , " and bad the felicity of owing diners sams to tailor * , bootmakers , batters , < fec , ana when I knew not where to turn for cash , I was agreeably surprised by X and the Impulsive proposing ^ a scheme to pav all-my debts without costing me a farthing . The scb " eme was this ' : X had bills of exchange for aH sums and at all dates , I was to indorse these to my several creditors and take the difference ; for instance , say I owed Hobby £ 88 , 1 took Mm a bill with onlv a few weeks to run for £ 150 , drawn by Jack iNokes upon" the Honorable Mr . —; Hobby shook his head at the acceptor ' s name , but was satisfied ( knowing mv
iamiiy ) with the indorsement ; I received £ 70 , which I handed over to X—— . This being done in eight or ten different places , I imagined myself out of debt , and having obtained a supply of money , went on as heedlessly- as ever . There is one peculiarity about all bills of exchange—they become due ; so it was with Eiine . ! Sot one of the many acceptances I had endorsed to my creditors were honored ; all came upon me . One sunshiny morning the Impulsive entered my bed-room ; " The game ' s up , old Tar , ~ said he " you must toddle . " The English of which was , I must get out of the way to aroi < f arrest I did bo ; dodgedinto Surrey , Sussex , Kent . < fca Again the subject of wedlock was renewed , but this ' I firmly negatived , and within
one formighr 3 oo coolly showed me the Gazette , amid the list of bankrupts , in which , my name appeared , with the description of ~ picture dealer /' Jt "was "when X and his friends explained to me how should be pulled through , " that my eyes were first opened to the mass of peijury , by which this was to be effected . The parties had mv acceptances on -which third , fourth , and fifth . nold " ers were to prove , and then sign my certificate , they , in numbers and amount swamping my real creditors . Though , my credit had been destroyed , and my character somewhat injured , I was really guiltless of any premeditated-wrong , and resolutely opposed all the scheme . * that were " to make me right as a
feet . Such were tie state of things when my uncle Jeremiah came to town . Reader I was—as I did , and you may imagine—once more free . I was truly grateful to Jeremiah , and bore with " old dot , find carry ope , " zs Bob « aDed >» m in his moods . He had receiTed a letter from my father , requesting to know the extent of my embarrassments , with a view to their liquidation , and then to bring me back . I gave the list , concealing only some trifles that I ¦ was ashamed to add , —those tnfles formed my annoyance for years . Matters . were happily in train for jay return ; I wished , though I dreaded it ; the places were booked , aid I had chatted over my intended journey-with X , when my trusty friend
inoroughgood arrested me at the suit of Madame - — - ( the lady who had vowed her heart ' s aSeetion to me ) for £ 320 , ** due unto her for board , lodging , and money lent . " I had never dreamt of snch a tiarm , and of course had never named it to my uncle ; he was outrageous , wrote angrily to my lather , who replied that I deserved no pity . I fonnd none—I *? 5 a prisoner . By one of the agreeable fictions ^ idi wbich ' thatnncommon process called common lawabeands , aman must get arrested , twice ere he fan rim" the Qneen ' s Bench . A second writ was issued , a habeas procured , and , in company with -a . « $ al functionarv , I dashed off to Mr . Jones's Hotel , then called Abbotf s Priory . I passed the
§ &te , and was left to wander about the pnson as I pleased , no room—no bed—being assigned to any ^ -corner . When a felon is brought to gaol , bis cell "with its mattress and rug , are shown him ; a prisoner for debt , if ^ without the wherewithal to Purchase food and shelter may perish in the open * & I had paced the racket ground once or twice , v hen a tall sandy man , who was " very sbaunty , though his hair vfae a leetle out of Ms hat , " ten dered his services ; and atthe expense of 25 s . jper * eek , I obtained a . furnished room , Ko . 4 in 7- The -following morning I was requested to attend at the fate ; thither I went , and stood for my Bcenessthat is to say , I encountered the gcruunMng ^ gaze
of the turnkeys , who take tins method of recogpiziBg every one in their eostody . Most persons imagine that p risoners in "fixe ( Queen ' s Benck are there on suspicion of . debt—no such thing ; those » ith whom r conversed , sofannry ' assured-me they oidn ' t owe a ' duffing-in . 'tfe ' world , ' but had , been placed in limbo brsbmB rascal of an attorney . " bombers of men who refo&d ' to pay their creditors * ere lavishing away htrgdrSd ? m Teckless expenses fcsre . But the most Hashing bencher of my" day * as a Mr . F n , yrhcrhaA Jeeh a ; banker ; it Jj M supposed that he'had concealed a large sum , » ° t » U attempts at tracing it failed . Bya small « mpromise with" one -or two , and * nJ >«* Eng on ^ regard to others , lie obtained Mslifety , and sskd T
to America , where ie now is .,, ABer ms denature his servant , whom he had defrauded of hush : ^ f ^ r , revealed the secr et ! tel&a"Hi whole forrone m large notes placed m- ^ kitoOmc heels of « 3 , 000 ^ hiCQ ^ always . « Iesn da ajmsel ^ and ! S ° 5 , v ° ed with him . If ^ jotiisfenSjogThe revek mnt -I mbae MbencEerl 1 foima . myiinpnson-Sfri the ^ p ^ rt-VereT "« nea , . 8 ad aV ^ tfeff m &e Moris M f iob plf ^* rhe ffighW ^* ^ s' over ' wfiofee &r a SK w ^ t ^ - ' . Some&n ^ Tias - en-P ^ erparSt ^^ ' ^ % * e waB « ot mj of miser ? tal ? 5 Sff- ™«« nionBwnt t ' of ; one scene ' kDklSxrr " % J * eh * from £ &e lifei—H ^ -, a ialf ofSZ ^ ° ^ er , o ^ ant ^ f meofter X It ™ ^ artmmtwas a K ^ Uwterf MKbemaker
^ iS ^^ ' ^^^ mi ^ USi When ^ 3 S ^' - ^ tbreafelea to compla ^ at the S only SSf ^ ^ ciaaren ^ ciedouf , they $ Sr S ^ Kfe *^ ¦* a matter & ^ iLitw reiT L ? . ^ 8 ca ^ reada- ^ conceive ^^ M ^ a 2 h ? h ^ 'k ^ T ^ ^ M ^ * dticafe 6 ji ^ apnoyed ^^ e ^^ m- ' w i ^ S f i ) ^^» T ^ and her ^_ ^* ^ * er fins was rather tixe result of low ^ JJ ^ -iu rforal mmify aJ ^ e . ^ tauiHZr ^ f . younger " aSa-ackened with the prOTy ^ an 4 . tte parents , wbo ^ couldbnt scant ily a » to ^ , ? f ttfenti had no means to purchase *» tW ' fltt c = * T wrought an entire ^ change ^ eir feBow . lod ger-hia Its of intemperance
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cea » ed—ne worked day and night at the krti ' ranf handeoV over the proceeds of Tub industry Jo tpe afBicted father . Alasi ^ he infant was beyond human aid , ttaeedays ^ nore and she was a corse ; h is with a feeling bordering upon agony that I recollect dxeatteau . atedfbrmoftiatTmfoitQnat 6 t&uver aad Jus TOstral , dance , at . tke tnrnkf y as he looked upon Ihe small blae cofi&a ^ aS contained the remains ofhis child , whilst the tuidertaker bore it throngb its gate to th ^ grave—that grare to wMcb , its fathftr w& 8 not permitted to see it consigned . At such moments a prison , is only , another name for Pandemonium My cash , was exhausted—trinkets , clothes , soon west , and I was at last reduced to the common costmne of ihBDrison . 2 DT dressinff srown ,
andindescribables . Iresolved to pexisb rather than again apply to my family : and was then , chummed with Lieut . H— : be had sold bis- half pay , and became like myself pennyless . It was the morning of the third day-which we bad passed without food , the only Tuxnrieswe had indulged in being one pot of porter , for which he obtained credit at the tap , and a pipe which we smoked by tums . Possibly , reader , yon have-never felt hunger—I have to excess . It is when the craving has passed away , and sickness , and inertness succeed ,, that it becomes dangerous . Its effects on my frame was to render me _ utterly indifferent to life ? Iliad not energy sufficient to write a note , for there were yet those who would have lent me a trifle ; I felt as if I could willingly sleep into nothingness . The action on the lieutenant was very different ; on the third morning he broke into fiitrhtml denunciations aeainst Providence and the
world ; he recounted all his perils in the Peninsula , his wants , his dangers , and then , with a passionate flood of tears , almost screamed out , " And here , here ' s Jach H— perishing in gaol for very hunger . " I have reason to Enow that be was a fearless soldier , but . want bad utterly subdued him—he -wept like a child . At last he started up , and darted out of the room . I deemed it a fit of madness , bnslacked energy even to look from the window what direction he was going * He returned in about ten minutes loaded with food—he had rushed to the Marshal ' s house , and in the frantic energy of want told our ¦ si tuation ; Mr . Jones had presented him a sovereign A day or two after this , I received an anonymous letter inclosing ten pounds ; who : my unknown friend was I vainly endeavoured to guess , but assuredly had that timely succour not arrived , this scene would have closed the adventures of A MAN ABOUT TOWN .
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XO LYTXG IX EXGLA > "n . " What is lying : " said the English court ier . u ' t say , indeed , sir , " says the footman . " Xever heard of it , " says the tradesman . " Never boronghmongered with it , " says the Peer . " Never bribed with it , " says the Member of Parliament . " Never subscribed the thirty-nine articles with it , " says the colleeian . "Never pretended to a call with it , " says the
clergyman . " Never nolo-episcopali'd with it , " says the bishop . " Never doctord' my port with it , "' says the winemerchant . " Never concealed a motive with it , " says the partizan . 44 Never pnfifd with it , " says the bookseller . "Never used it in my bread , " says the baker . ** Nor I in my bill , ' says the tailor . ~ Can ' t coHceive liow anybody ever thought of it , " says the innkeeper .
** Never made an eiciise with it , " says the fine lady . " Nor I , '' says the lady ' s maid . "Am . a horrible sinner , but never went so far as . that , " says the Methodist . "Never uttered one to my wife , pretty jealous soul , " says the husband . v Nor I to my husband , poor man , " says the wife . 14 Nor I in one of my speeches , " says the king ; 44 Nor 1 in mine , " says the minister . " Nor I at a foreign court , " says the diplomatist . " Shonld never forgive myself such a thing , " say * the pickpocket . —Monthly Repository r
"How to Get Oj » . "—The Apothecary Method — ' Don'tyou see ? " said Bob ; "he goes up to a house , rings the area-bell , pokes a packet of medicine , without a direction , into the servant ' hand , and walk . * off . Servant takes \ t into the diningparlour ; master opens it , and reads the label , ' Draught to be taken at bedtime—pills as beforelotion as usual—tJte powder . Prom Sawyer ' s , Tate Noc-iennorFs . Physicians' prescriptions carefully prepared ; ' and all the rest of it . Shows it to his
wife , jhe reads the label ; it goes down to the servants—they read the label . Next day the boy calls : ' Very sorroy—bis mistake—immense business—great many parcels to deliver—Mr . Sawyer ' s compliments—late Nockennorf . ' The name gets known , and that ' s the thing , my boy , in the medical way ; bless your heart , old fellow , it ' s better than all the advertising in the world . We have got one four-ouDce bottle that's been to half the houses in Bristol , and hasn't done jet . " —( From the . Pick tciek " Papers . )
" How to Get ok . "—The Rogue ' s Method . —A London thief , of any notoriety , after having been a short time in Sydney , would scorn to place himself or his assignee wife , in so mean a vehicle as a gig : nothing less than a carriage and pair is commensurate wit * the rank in felony to ¦ which they have arisen in Australia . A better idea of the effect of all this upon a stranger cannot be conveyed than by the following anecdote of an officer who visited l \ ew South Wales on leave of absence from his regiment in India . —Having gone with a friend , in a gig , from Sydney to the races at Paramatta , they were passed on the road by many genteel equipages , including close carriages ,
currides , and landaus . In answer to the strangers questions , his companion informed him that one brilliant set-out belonged to Sam Sueh-a-one , who had been a convict , but was now a free man , and a man of fortune ; that another was the property of a convict , who kept a draper ' s shop in Sydney , but was assigned to his wife , who had brought out with him a large sum of money } that a third belonged to aticket-of-leave-man , who had obtained that indulgence almost immediately after bis arrival in the colony—and so on . At the race-course , where " all
the beauty and fashion" of felonry was assembled , the stranger ' s astonishment was complete at the number of instances in which he obtained similar answers . After some graver reflections on so singular an exhibition , be ironically remarked , that he thought he had better return as soon as possible to India , for the purpose of there committing some crime that should subject him to a short sentence of transportation , for it really seemed to him that that was the best way of getting on in the world . —Mudie ' s Felonry of New South Wales .
A Mojjkey of Discretion . —In a country town , no matter where , there lived the worthiest and most philosophical of old bachelors , with a warm heart and a sound head , from whose weH-powdered exterior had dangled that most respectable ornament , a queue . Our bachelor entertained a monkey of such good breeding and to much discretion , that Jacko -was permitted to make one at the dinner table , " where he was seated on a high child's chair , nest to bis master , and took off his glass of perry in the same time and measure of his patron , and in an good a style and manner as Domine Sampson himself could have performed the feat . Now his master ' s housekeeper made the best preserved apricots
in the county , and , when the said apricots were enshrined in a tart , the golden fruit set off by the superincumbent trellis , a more tempting piece of dattiserie could hardly be laid before man or monkey . One of these tarte enriched the board of a small dinnerparty , and was put nearly opposite to Jacko , who occupied his usual station . The host helped first one arid then another to some of thw exquisite tart , but ^ forgot poor Jacko , who had been devouring it with his eyes , and was too well bred to make any indecorous snatch at the object of attraction , as most monkeys would have done . At last he could stand no longer ; so looking
to the right and left , and . finally fixing his eyes on the guest opposite , he quietly lifted up his hand , behind his master ' s back , and gave his tail ? uch a plug as made' the powder fly , withdrew his hand in an instant , and sat with a . vacant expression of the greatest innocence . People do not like to have their ; tails pulled . "His , master gave him a look , and Jacko ; gave him another , but even the eloquent expression of Hogarth' s monkey . on the . offending bear ' s . back fell short of it . It said as plainly , as look could speak , ^ Ddn ' tybe angry—don ' t strike—they rdjd not see it—I beg jonr . paVdon—but I musthavf a bit of apricot tart . He waa ^ rg iyen and helped . r ^ JSr « c Monthly .
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ORIGINALCORRESPONDENCE
The RJtteru of " Tbe Northern Star " vitiv . to fee di * ttactt | r understood that in affording a T » lUcle . ft > r toe discu » lon of great Public Question * , ibey ^ Me aot [ to ke identiied wi «» tbe Senfizpents or the L&Bgoage « f their several Correspondent * ¦ ' WHAT " NEXT .-f ' , TO THE EDITORS OF THE SORTHEBN STATt . m Gentlemen , —If there be any mean * by which the indnstriou * and usefiol million !! of the people of
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England can be keptj'I will not say comfortably , but from actual starvation on . Jheir native s « il , is it s > ot hi g h , time for those means to be resorted , toj ? By . taking a retrospective view of their condition , it appears that for the last century it has been gradually waking , mm that ere this , if public reports claim ciedit , thousands of our fellow-beings nave sunk into their mother earth for want of the necessaries of life * which the earth nas , as yet , produced in abundance . What , then , 1 would ask , has been the cause of this disaster ? Has the earth ' s prbi dnce been consumed by a general conflagration ^ or swallowed up by a mighty earthquake ? No I , How then has it Happened I But before I proceed , allow
me to ask , have the great landed proprietor ^ the Btock-jobbers , and the trading capitalists , suffered in any degree the growing evil ot the times ? No ! How , theD , 1 ask , has it happened r The reason is obvious . The characters last mentioned have been the law makers , and have so formed them , as to rob the rest of the community , for their exclusive and individual aggrandizement . This is the cause , and nothing else . In proof of this , if proof be wanting let us look at the numerous ana expensive war ? , which , they have occasioned , and ask , what wa 9 their object ? Was it for the good of the pe % > le rto preserve them from tbxaluom . ?—oi was it lo preserve , in some instances , those estates in their
own hands , thst were stolen' from the quiet arid peaceable inhabitants , at the time of the conquest , and given to them as a reward for plundering those inhabitants ; many thousands of the rightful heirs of whom are now-pining away from starvation ^ whUst they , the knaves , with changed names , to avoid disgrace , are wallowing in luxury ? Now was not this the real object , and that only the pretended one as it respects the French war ? And , as it respects the war with the United States of America , what was its object ? And what ; is the object of the present one with Canada , but something equally base and dishononrable ; not for the good of the public , but against it . Who , then ,
ought to bear the expense of those wars s The people ? Ho ! surely not ! But those very characters above mentioned have actually imposed the whole of it upon the people , and something more . This may appear strange , hut it is nevertheless true . You are aware , that alter the conclusion of the French war , the taxes of the nation were considerably augmented . This , according to the rule previously and unreasonably laid down by themselves , brought upon them " an additional burden ; and feeling that inconvenient and impolitic , according to their notion of policy , and haying the power to alter it , they set to work in right good earnest , and carried a measure through Parliament , best known to the people by the appellation of the Corn Laws , in consequence of
which , they were enabled to doable , and in mac instances treble , and more than that , the rents of their property ; by which means , as I said before , they not only imposed the whole of those taxes , but something more , upon the people , turning' a national calamity into an aris ^ ratical blessing . Many other laws , equally crueT and oppressive , might be enumerated , in proof of the cause of the people ' s miseries , being the exclusive privilege of a fraction of the people to legislate for the whole . But enumeration is unnecessary . Common sense must perceive , and hoin \ sty own , " that so long as the W \/ wy ^ l A « 7 1 LI L 11 &
l <<^ UiUUlU ULIXJXIJ ( . UJ 11 IUCU XiCtXIUS of the anstocracy , —men whose prejudices and interests are opposed to the good of the public , ^—the miseries of the mass will be continually magnified . Whether the ^ ' be termed Wbigs ^ Tories , or anything else , is a matter of . no consequence . Theyare beasts of prey , without humanity , and without mercy ; and , therefore , if the masses do not immediately combine , with spirit axid determination , to hav » tLeir right in legislation , the result is evident . They will be slaves of the most degraded order . Look at the hellish design of our rulers , after a long run of unequalled misrule aud oppression , by which a vast proportionof the useful people of these realms , the labourers , have been
reduced to a state of destitution ; and by the continuance of which , all soon will be . They huv > » made a law called the Poor Law Amendment Act , the manifest design of which appears to be the deprivation of the rest of th « . * community of every earthly comfort . Bastiles ? are to be erected , having a small yard , surrounded by an high and lofty waif , over which nothing can be seen except the arch of heaven ; for that situation , the labouring men of England a ' re to exchange their liberty to range abroad , and view the various scenes of nature and art . Their wives , here , are to be taken from them , not any more to be seen or spoken to—thyir children , also , th *» ir theme of consolation and object of
their tenderest feeungs . more dear to them than even life itself , are to be separated iroin both , and put into the hands of some monster , in human shape , I allow , whose feelings for the little infant will I > robably resemble most that of a wolf ¦ towards a amb—for sure I am , that no one possessing human feelings , -will be tool or iii * tniment in that crue ] establishment . In this nethermost hell , the consolation , of the dissenter , arising from the religious ceremonies to which he has be ' eu accustomed , is to be cut off ; and last of all , though perhaps not least , the inmates of this infernal abode are to live .
or die , from a diet of --15 Jd . jkt week . AH this in consequence of poverty , which has been forced upon them , by laws of robbery and extortion . iSow , after thLsl I say-to every man , wilt thou 4 > e a slaw or a freeman ? If a slave , as above described , say the power of legislation shall remain in the hands of the aristocracy ; but if a freeman , say 1 will have my right , or lo . se jny life ; for a life of misery is wor < e than death . Iu conclusion , I would therefore say to the" people of England , Universal Suffrage , or right , call it which they will , or nearly universal slavery , is the approaching condition of their country .
I remain , Gentlemen , Your's most obediently , JOHN BEAUMONT Melthanu 14 th Febraarv , 1 S 38 .
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TO THE EDITORS OK THE NORTHERN STAR . Gextlemex , —I am one of those who have seen the time when all manufacturing labour was performed in the habitations * of the workmen , and what is more , when all the carding , all the spinning , and all the weaving , were j > erforined by the human hand ; all carding by a single pair of curds , one worked in each hand ; all spinning by the single thread ; and all weaving by throwing the shuttle from the one hand to the other . In those days each particular family went to work in the morning whenever it suited _ their own pleasure or convenience , and also left it at any moment they pleased . Parents had their children under their own care
during their infancy , and under their own training and management during their minority , and apportioned their tatsks according to their own discretion . Now , so far as the Factory System extends , both parents and children are summoned by their taskmasters to their work at a much earlier hour in the morning than they had previously been , and are also confined much closer through the day , and compelled to be more active and more diligent , and , after all , confined a greater number of hours each day , than they have previously been , so that , in fact , " the Factory people are now compelled to perform , almost , ii not quite , twice as much work in the course of a year as they performed previous
to the introduction of that machinery of which we boast so much , and whose power is said to be many times as great as all human power put together , and yet after all , what have we to do now , as a people , more than we had to do then ? We have now only food , raiment , and other necessaries to produce , ana we bad all those things to produce then ; and what is the most wonderful of all , and lamentable as well as wonderful , that we have far , far more hunger , nakedness , and theft in existence now , than we had in the days before this machinery was introduced . Are not all these facts proof positive , that , we have totally lost all that kind of wisdom which is necessary for the guidance and direction of national affairs ?
TSiheyiterests of the wvrking classes bad been properti ) r represented in Parlimneht ^ during the last seventyrears , I verily believe , that their tasks , insteadof being doubled , might hare been reduced onehalf ; arid their necessaries and comforts have been doubled . I have been told that the annual produce of the Kingdom , if equally divided , would amount to 10 s . a w ^ ek ,. for every man , woman and child in the kingdom . But I should like to be informed bow many families there are in our boasted township , who have not one-half of that sum : and also what theyjhavelo'Pay for ^ rentoutof their present pittance . If yon deem the above worthy of a place in the Star , please to insert it therein . J . KNIGHT .
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TO THE EDITORS OF THE NORTHERN STAR . Gentlesien , —If you think that the following copy of a letter which I sent to Lord Howick , is worth inserting in your valuable paper , you may insert it . ;
ABRAHAM HANSON .-TO LORD HOWICK . My Lord , —On / the debate on Mr . Fielden's motion for a total repeal of the Poor Law Amendment Act , which took place-in tha House of Commoris on the 20 th of February ^ you asked the Hon . Member forOldham , if . the agricultural labourers were . discontented with the measure , when the Hon . Member replied 4 hat thes discontent wai , very great : yon asked for % e Symptoms of that disebnteri ^ and remarked that' the pait ; yeaf had been ayear of nnexampled ; . pressure , am yet there had been tio fees , ^ acte , of incendiarism : this was a proof according to ytmr opinion of the contentment of the agricultural districts , and you attributed that contentment to the working of the New Poor Law . Now , my Lord , this assertion of yours proves that yon do not or will not understand the real cause
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of the peace of iiie agncriUural district The Poor Law na » npihing ^ tOj do ; with ., iliie peacejof the district , bnt in tJ fe ericl it ;^ 1 be onei cans ^ v Ont of ; niany to create thoiesyinptpm 8 whichy 6 acorieider ^^ to ^ ^^ sure sign of ; discontent * jPlace the agricultural labourers in the same , destitute , circumstances as they were in 18 ^ 6 , ; -aiid the same ^^ effects would ensne . The horizon woald beillujniiedwith the blaie pf the niidnight incendiary . Now the agricaltural labourers are better oft ; with , regard toVwagesAban th ^ 1830 ; aud secondly , you hay » imothered those symptoms of diBcpriteatj > 1 jt iot extirigoished ; them , by your aristocratic coercions . Hitherto i , the ^ pressure ,, as you . call it , b . as been alternately thrown first upon the shoulders of the manQfactrirers , -and then . upon the agriculturists . It is now pressing hard upon the shoulders of the manufacturer ^ arid yet your symptom of disconterit i is not elicited . What is the ; reason of tlus 4 h ? nk you ? Why I Organization , progress of knowledge ; we congregate together , we discuss otw grievances , and We have laid those grievances before the legislature in a legal tnanrier . Yes , we have inraidated the Howe of Commons with our petitions ^ and what lias been the result ? ^ Why , our complaints have been disregarded , and our pmyers trampled under foot , and you " my Lord have / the audacity to tell the pjrodrictive classes of England that they are satisfied with the measure , because they have , riot resorted to the aristocratic maxim of destruction . I call it a maxim which belongs * toyour order ; for in all ages of our histbry tiie aristocracy have always manifested their discontent b y the destruction of both life and property , and your speech seems to encourage this mode of shewing pur discontent to the measures of government . It will nltimately be verified , for the pressure will undoubtedly return to the agriculturists , arid then your starvation act will be fairly tested . I can assure youi * Lordship that it will not work w ell in the mariufac t uring districts . : i { fe > t will not'be separated my Lord from their wives and children \ fith impunity , they will not submit to wear the felon ' s garb for rip other crime than poverty , when they know that ; thatpoverty is produced by misgovernment . Yen , my Lord , they know they have as much right to live in the land that gave them birth , as the / proudest Peer in the realm . Knowing this , dp you think they wil ) submit to be bastiled ? No ! riiy Lord , men will not tamely submit to perish by thousands . If you think so , you know nothing of man in the mass , you have only studied him in theory . If you ; knew the age we . live in , you would acknowledge by . \ vhat feelings tlie productive cla * ses are nt preserit actuated , you would admit that it is but a continuation of the feelings which . in past ages had freed your own order from a pressure which had become intolerable .. I will allow , that yriu see ithe movement towards self-goverment progressive , and all your acts along with the acts of government is to lighten the law , in . order to stop its progress ; bat you cannot , cirenras'tances ore against you , the spirit of the age is an irresistable power , the New Poor Law will accelerate its movements . Th , at bill aims adeadly blow atwages . Thit » will suit those men who live upon fixed income , those' cormorants , who want labour cheap and inoriey dear ; it . is the interest o f those knaves to g rind the labourer to the dost , but at the same time * it will hurl those profitmongers into the vortex of Ppverty .. v Those men live directly by the prpductive classes , and low wages will not suit the purposes of those men ; for as thelabourer beeomespoor , theirpov (? rtywillincrea « e in a like ratio at the same time . If you want toniake independent labourers , my Lord , you niust legislate so as the lnbpnror will be able to realize good wages by his industry , for a bastile will not make him independent . ' I am , my Lord , yours , ABRAHAM HANSON . Elland , MarcYi 12 , 1838 . . ' . ' . ' ' ' ? ' . - - : ; . - . ' ¦ ' ¦ . ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ " ¦ ' ¦ . LONDON WOOL MARKET , BRJTISH & FORKIGN .-Moji . Aa most of the seller * of BritisA . Wool are holding their Wool for advanced fates , which evert ni ; edv ptirchasers are not inclined to accede to , but little has been doing since bur last report at iihaltered prices . Down teggs , Is 6 d to Is 7 d ; half-bred do ., Is 6 d to Is Bd ; JJomti e « t > 3 and wcAhers , Is 2 d to Is 4 d ; . Leicester hogs , Is 3 d to Is 5 d ; Leicester wethers , Is Id U > Is 2 d ; blanket wool , 9 d to Is ; flahneVdo . Is t 6 ls . 4 d ; skin combing , Is Od to Is ljrid , ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ . ¦ . .- ¦ ¦• ¦ . ¦ . ' : . . . . - . ' ¦; ,. . ' . •' , ¦ - ¦ The prices realized ; at the List public sales being satisfactory to the sellers , the foreign Wool trade is steady ^ andthis prices are firmly , supported , Since Monday last the imports have been moderate . ; LONDON CORN EXCHANGE , Mark-LanE , Monday ^ April 2 . The weather since this day se ' nnight has been very fine , much sun generally during the day , whilst the nights were mostly : very foggy and cold , triat , excopt on stifl' soils which now require moisture ; spring tillage has proceeded favourably ; this month , however , has commenced very cold , having ha'd sharp froste dniing the two past nights , th < 3 thermorneter registering yesterday morning 27 / degrees and this morning only 25 degrees , too sever * for thts Wheat p lant which has been unfavourably spoken of in many places , and as yet-no warm rain to recover or improve it f where , it has thus suffered from the severity ' -of the past winter * if yet past it can be said to be . The supply of Wheat , Barley , Btiiins , and Peas , from Essex and Kent was only , moderate ; of the two former articlea there was rather an increased quantity from Suffolk j and from Norfolk a large quantity of Barter , hut onlr limited fresh arrivals of Oats , arid these principally from bur own - coast , hairing had few vessels in lrora iKotland or Ireland since Friday . Thecondition of the Wheat on 9 i \\ e this morning was much improved , and picked samples met a , steady sale at the rates of this- day se-nnjght , but the trade was not brisk for these sorta , and after the early sales had been made of fine qualities , other sorts were , take ' ri off slowly , although generally offered :. !» .. to 2 s . peT ¦ ¦ qr . nriflBr the currency of last Monday . Flour was without alteration in Value . Choice malting Barley , bronght the ratesof last week , bnt the next descriptions were Is . per qr . choaper , whilst grinding samples were not lower . Maltimet a fair sale at fully as much money . Beans and Peas were fully au dear ; and both articles in request ; The late targe supply of Irish Oats may now be considered as . cleared off the market , either to speculators or dealers , and as the number of vessels , with- this article at sea is known to be limited , and supplies of English and Scotch continue oh amoderate scale Tail sorts were liflldon-higher : terms , but the sales effected , were only to a limited extent , and at 6 d . per qn over last MondayV [ quotations . Linseed and Rapeseed woefully as aear . « ., Dnnng the past week d briak demand existed lor Uovcrseed ; and red brought ah advanceof 2 si to 4 s . per cwt ., as in mialitjr , the lowersorts improving the most : Bonded grain of all sorts fully as dear . : - CURRENCY PER IMPERIAL . MEASURE . ' Jy . HEAT . g . 8 . jyialt ^ JStoTfolk Pale .. 52 * . . el ) E «??! Kent , Suffolk . 51 .. 62 Wore . ; . ; . ; ...... 61 .. 63 White ............ 52 ; . 63 pwit ; Nor ^ &Ltoc ^ hirelJ ; .. 62 Hbiand Gr ™ .. »! .. 32 w | &try- ^ :: v r ^ te ma £ ^ • - > ° White , do ......... o „ BfcANS . Northnmberland and 5 , ™? ••*••»••• -..., i . Scotch White .... 50 .. 54 X ^ ' old .......... 32 .. ^ 6 Kin . do ........ . . . . . . i 54 .. 58 f ^ y " - ¦ «• v- . 35 .... 42 Moray-Angus and Mazagan .......... , RothshireRed .... Q ^ 0 OATS . ¦ " -White . ^ .. i .. .- . 4 ¦¦ .:. _ 0 Engiiahfeed ,,,... ; . !^ .. 22 IrwhRed , New .....-. 48 . ' . 56 Short small . v .... . ' Do . White w ;; . : .. . 56 . V ; 5 » -Poland .. ;; .,,... 52 ; . 26 _ i ... BARLEY , . - Scotch , common ^ v . 22 .- . 24 'pn « ng ; - ¦" ¦ . > V" 2 £ . . i , >» Potatoe ; ... V ; . V .. 24 ; . 30 Distilling ,..... „ ,. 28 .. Sff - Berwick ... i ., v ... - J ^ ltingi New ... v . 3 i ; . 36 Iris , white . ; . ; ..,. 20 . ; 26 ( heraWNew ,..... -: Dp . Potatoe ... ^ . ! aialtiBrown ... ; ii 48 . i 50 Do / Black , i . V . ^ . i 20 iV 22 - ; .- - ¦ - ; ¦' ¦ .- ¦ - ^ --iafPBRiAli / AyERAGiBS ,- ^ ..: ¦ .. ; . ' : ¦ ;¦¦ - .- - ¦ , '¦ „ , , ,. „ j JWhtBarieC > afeRye BnW Peai : Week endingFeb ! 16 th 1838 55 3 28 9 SO 0 28 ' 6 32 7 32 T » . ^ 23 ^ " 552 28 8 ^ 27 632 032 10 M » rch 2 nd «« 55 3 28 820 U 30 033 10 S 3 0 9 tk «« 55 4 28 6 20 6 2 » 3 32 v 1-4 33 t 4 J 6 & « ; M 3281020 881 632 , 983 5 23 rd « - ; - 5510 29 6 21 2 30 ^ 7 33 1 32 r ^ Aggregate .-A verag « : 6 rth « ; ' ^ V' ^ ' u' ' 'i' ^ ' ' •<* ' ' - ' ^ _ last six weeks - . ^ . ^ ... v , 55 8 28 10 208 299 32-7 32 ii ( n "" . .. i . « .. . i ... i ; 31 , 8 19 10 16 9 25 9 21 ' 3 21 ' 3 Do . on gram from British . . ; -.- - , -. i V > v Possessions put of ¦ ¦ . ' .- ¦¦ '¦ ¦' , ' . ' . '' :, ' " ¦'' ¦ ' ''¦ ' i" ' - ; - ^ - ¦ ' > ''¦ ¦ ¦ r I' -- i ~ y . - /* '' H | / ' . - . . . ' - . j ' . ' - .-V - . . ' ¦¦'¦; ' . - . ; . ¦ : '• - ' : ¦ '* . \ , ~ ¦' •¦"¦¦'¦ '¦'¦¦¦¦' ' •¦ '•; . - <•' , ' ' ^ URR ^ Ntp ! k # S of- GltAmp ^ lm ^ ljartJjr ; ^ nu ? A HTrr } E& *" AVKRAGB PKIGES of BRITISH GRAIN , per Imperial Quarter , ' Sold in the London MaAet , during the week , enairi ^ March 27 . —Wheat , 7 . 892 -mi . & 9 a . ^ ^| 7 » 13 , 602 qrs . 30 a ; 1 M .. Oats , 35 , 141 qrt . 22 s . Id . Beana , 839 qm : 3 li . lOd . Peas , 906 qrs . 33 s . 3 d . Rye , 128
Markets Markets
MARKETS MARKETS
LEEDS CORN MAlVkEt April 3 . The Jirrivals of Wheat and Bt > ans to this day ' s market , arc smaller than last 1 week ; Oatd aud Barley-..-rather larger , There has been a fair dcmaiid for Wheat- at last week ' s prices . The best Barley has liiade rather more ¦ inoney , th « secondary qnalitiesj no alteration ., Oats , iihellin ({ , and Beiiua haveTiot varied in price . Kapeseed Vvitbont alteration-. . AVIIEAT per Quarter of Eight Bushels , 601 b £ Norfolk , Suffolk , Essex , new red , 53 , 55 , line 59 a * wht . 5 ds 63 a Lincolnshire and Cambridge , do 52 » , 5 Js , do 57 « , do 56 s 6 U YoTkshiie ................ do 524 , 54 a , do 57 s , do 55 a i 9 s Old ......................- do-52 a , 54 s , do 58 a , do 56 s 62 d BAHLKV per Quarterot' Eight Imperial Bushels . . . Norfolk , and Sutlblk ............ new , 27 s , extra line 31 s 34 s LEEDS CORN MARKET April 3 . The arrivals of Wheat and Beans to this day ' s market , are smaller than last 1 week ; Oats aud Barley rather larger . There has been a fair demand for Wheat- at last week ' s prices . The best Barley has liiade rather more -rnoney , the secondary qualities * no alteration ., Oats , Shelling , and Beans haveTiot varied in price . Kapeseed Without alteration-. . WHEAT per Quarter of Eight Bushels , 601 bS . Norfolk , Suffolk , Essex , new red , 53 , 55 , line 59 s * wht . 56 s 63 s Lincolnshire and Cambridge , do 52 s , 5 Js , do 57 s , do 56 s 61 s YoTkshiie ................ do 524 , 54 s , do 57 s , do 55 s 59 s Old ......................- do-52 a , 54 s , do 58 s , do 56 s 62 s BAHLKV per Quarterof Eight Imperial Biisnds . . . Norfolk , and Suffolk ........... . new , 27 s , extra line 31 s 34 s
Lii ) Co ] nshm % do 26 a , do 30 a 3 Is Yorkshire , Wold & Boroughbrid ^ e , do 26 s , do 30 s 33 s Peas , % YUite ..... ... ...... . . .... ... do 3-ls 40 s i ) o Grey .......... .................... do 32 aMs BEAiSS per Quarter uf 631 bs per Bushel . Tick , ............... ....... new , 34 si 36 . v old 35 s 39 s Hunw and 1 'igeoh , .......,.... do 36 a , 38 s , do 38 a 42 a OATS , per Quarter of Ei « ht Imperial Bushels ; -. Potato , ............... T .............. ijew , 24 s , 25 t > , old 27 a Poland , , ; .....-. - . do 24 s , 25 s , do 27 a Small aud Kriezland , ... ' ; .,....... do 23 s , 25 s , do 26 a . Mealing ,. . new 12 d . to 13 Jri . per Stone of 141 bs . SHKLLI . N ' G , per Load ofgUUbs ,.... old 30 s 31 s new —s to —a MALT , p .-r Load of 6 Bushels ,................ . 3 ^ 3 , 40 s , to 42 ri UAPESEED , per Last of 10 Quarters , ........ . * 26 to j 4 ' 27 —a ARRIVALS DURING THE WEEK . Ljncoinshiri ' , " -:. do 26 a , do 30 a 3 ln Yorkshire , Wold & Boroughbridge , do 26 s , do 30 s 33 s Teas , White ..... ... ...... .... ... do 34 s 40 s Do Grey .......... .................... do 32 aMs BEAiSS per Quarter uf 631 bs per Bushel . Tick , ............... ....... new , 34 si 36 . v old 35 s 39 s Harrow and 1 'igeon , .......,.... do 36 s , 38 s , do 3 J » 42 s OATS , per Quarter of Ei « ht Imperial Bushels ; ¦ . Potato , ............... T .............. uew , 24 s , 25 s , old 27 s Poland , ..-. -. do 24 s , 25 s , do 27 s Small aud FriezLuid , ... ' ; .,....... do 23 s , 25 s , do 26 s . Mealing ,. . new 12 d . to 13 J < 1 . per Stone of 141 bs . SHKLLI . N ' G , per Load of 2 < iUbs ,.... old 30 s 31 s new —s to — a MALT , p .-r Load of 6 Bushels ,................ . 3 ^ 3 . , to 42 s UAPESEED , per Last of 10 Quarters , ....... . ^ 26 to j 4 ' 27 —s ARRIVALS DURING THfi WEEK .
Wheat 465 ? Oiita ..... SS 7 Barley . 3121 Bi-aris 493 Peas .............. Tares ..... Wheat 465 ? Oata ..... SS 7 Barley . 3121 IVaris 493 Peas .................. Tares ..................
THR AVEHAGK PRICKS KOH THE WEEK-ENDING ^ lAKcn 20 th , 1 * 38 . THR AVEHAGK PRICKS KOH THE WEEK-ENDING MahcH 20 th , 1 H 38 .
Wheat . Oats . Barley . 4316 Iil 5 2793 5 > m . 7 . 1 . 23 s , 2 d . 31 s . 3 d Wheat . Oats . Barley . 4316 lil 5 2799 5 < i . 7 . 1 . 23 . 1 . 2 d . 31 s . ii
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Malt .................. 74 Shellini ? .............:. 20 n Hour . ' .... 210 llapeseed .............. 680 Linseed . SO Malt .................. 74 Shelling .............:. 20 n Hour ,.... 210 Rapeseed ............. ; 680 Linseed SO
Henna . Rye . Pens . 375 — 56 3 Ss . lid . — s . Od . 3 G . i . lid Beans . Rye . Pens . 375 — 56 3 Ss . lid . — s , Od . . 36 s . lid
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SftlJTHFlELD CATTLE MARKET , Al-RIL 2 . ¦ [ Whenever the worn stone Dcenrsin these pricestliropghon t « w paper , it is to be considered as theunpenal stone of I 41 bs . and succ only , no : other being lawful . ] : ¦ - - ; ... ¦/ : We having ii fair suppl y of Beasts exhibited for sale in out market this morniug , and the attendance of buyers being very Umited , 6 ur trade with Beef was exceedingly dull , whilst last week ! s highest quotation ^; vfe . 4 s . 4 d ; per 8 lba ; was only obtained in a . very Tew : trifling transactions . The genera ] quality of ^ the Beasts , several of wMct ¦ weie driven away at the ' close of the 1 'trade , / without finding purchasers , wai tolerably prime . There was a good supply of Sneep / Dfleringj wittv .. tie iprimest Soutbdowns , which ; were scarce : : Trade waa rather briskj at ; full prices ; but in other ; kinds of Sheep little was doing . The supply of Calves was short , I n ^ d trade heavy at Friday '* ctUTencies ; Allkirids of Pork experienced a . very sluggish demand , at late rates , From Ireland , the atr ivals of live pigs bj-sea were moderate . Tb . 999 ^ Beasta which bav » comebysteamers from Scotland are , for the most part , of very ^ Bnperibr quality , but we are rbry apprehensive tViattney will' hot ' prove very remuDerative to the shippers . We received up to this ' day ' s market , about 500 Scots arid homebredsfrom Norfolk ; 100-Scots and Devpns from Suffolk ; 200 Devona ] and Runts from Essex ; 300 Herefords , Devons , arid Scots from Cambridgeshire ; 400 Shortrhbrns from Leicestershire ; 100 'Short-horns and Devons from 'NdrtHaniptbnshjre ; . 60 . Short-horns , Runts , Devons , and Herefords from yferwickshire ; 39 Sbort-hbrris and Runts from Oxfordsbire ; 40 Septs , by sea ,: from Scotland ; 100 Herefords , from Herefordshire ; . 200 Devon . 8 from ^ Deybnslvire ; : 65 RnhU and Oxen fiom Sussex ; 40 Scots and Devpns from Surrey ; 10 Rants , Herefords , and Devons from Kent ; 300 Short-horns from Leicestershire . - The remainder of the Bullock supply was chiefly obtained from the neighbourhood . The supply of Sheep was chiefly composed of Soutlidowns , old and new Leicesters , Dbrsets , Kent and Kentish half-breds , withafewpens of sundry crosses , as a ! so 200 , by sea , froni Scotland . Tie Lainbs , which were in moderatesupply , \ yere Dorsets . ; Per stone of 81 bs . to aink the bffal . . ¦ "<*• ¦ s . d . s , d . s . d . s . d . InferiorBeef 2 2 to 2 6 PrimeBeef . ; .... ^ 4 to 3 8 Ditto Mutton ... . 3 4 . w 3 6 Ditto Mutton .... 4 8 .. 5 0 Middling Beef ... 2 8 .. 3 0 Lamb ,.......... 6 6 .. 7 0 DittoMutton 3 8 .. 3 10 Veal ............. 4 4 .. 5 0 LIVE CATTLE AT MARKET . Uezsls , 2 , 634—Sheep , 21 , 63 &—Calyes , 64—Pigs , 304 . Live Cattle at Market on Friday last , Beasts 538—Sheep 3 ^ 29—Calves 68—Pigs 541 . : NEWGATE AND : LEAbENHALL MARKETS , ( Monday . ) ¦ ¦ '• The . arrivals of slaugtered meat , since oiir last have been , compared with those in the preceding week , somewhat 011 the decline . However , the general quality of them . has been much pr iuier than we have witnessed ; lor some time past . About oO packages of mesit have arrived hither in the above period from varioua quarters . ' Froin ' .-Ireland-, ' by steam ' packets ; . we have received 187 large liogs , which have been disposed of at very low prices . The arrivals of dead meat from Scotland have been much less than in any preceding week this year , which circumstance is attributed to the prices obtained lor both Beef and'Mutton in the principal . markets in Scotland being on the advance . With London slaughtered meat these markets are tolerably well supplied ; whilst the trade is heavy , at but little alteration in the quotations , TALLOV / AND CANDLES . Whitechapel , Market price of Kat , 3 s 2 jd . In quantities of 81 bs , - s . a , s . d . Town Tallow ^ percwrt ) 57 0 : Graves ., IS ! 0 Russia do ( Candle ) .. 56 6 Good Dregs .......... 5 0 Wiiiteilo ... 6 0 Mould Candles ........ 9 6 Stuff 44 0 Store do .............. 8 0 Rough do ............ 28 0 Inferior ditto .......... 7 0 HAY AND STRAW ( per load of 36 trusses . ) Smithfieia . £ . a . jf , s . Whitechapel . \ £ . s . ' Jt . a . Hay . ; .......... 4 0 a 5 0 Hay ............ 3 15 a 5 0 Clover .......... 4 0 a 5 10 Clover .......... 5 Oa' 6 0 Straw ........... . 1 . 18-a 2 2 Straw ......... * . 1 16 a 2 0 Cuuiberlaiid ; Portman , Edgeware-ioad . Hay .........+.. ... ¦ 4 0 a 5 0 Hay ,...,. 4 16 a 5 5 Clover .... 5 0 a 5 15 Clover .......... 5 Oa . 5 15 Straw 1 18 a 2 2 Straw ........... 2 0 a 2 6 PRICES OF HOPS IN THE BOROUGH . There has been a brisk demand for pockets during the last week , and considerable business done at full pricesi , : '• .-.. Farnham ..... * 7 0 to 9 0 East Kent , Pket ^ 0 to 6 "" 0 Mid . Kent Pkets 3 15 .. 5 12 Weald of Kent do 3 10 . ' i 4 0 Bags .......... 3 1 ^ .. 5 0 Sussex Vockets .. 3 5 .. 3 16 THE WATERSIDE POTATOE MARKET . The market was in a state of stagnation during the last week , being completely glutted with potatoes of every description . s . a .- . "¦ . ''¦ ¦« . n . York Reds ( per ton ) 60 a 70 I Shaws ( per ton ) ..... . ' 45 a bh Scotch Rods ........ 40 a 55 I Devon Ue&a ........ 50 a 60 Kidneys ,.. 6 Q a ? f > Jersey Whites ....... . 45 a 5 ( 1 Natives ............ i 5 a 55 j Blues .... 50 a ( iO : HIDES ( per lb . ) d . d . d . d Market Hides , 56 a Market Hides , 96 a ¦ 641 b » .. v 2 ja 2 \ 104 lbs ............. 3 Ja 4 Ditto , M a 72 lbs ..... 2 f a 3 Ditto , 104 iv 112 lbs ... V 4 a 5 Ditto , Ti a 80 lbs ..... 2 * a 3 | Calf Skms ( each ) ...... 6 s Od Ditto , SO a 881 ba ..... 3 a 3 } Horse Hides , ditto . ... 8 s Od Ditto , 88 a 96 lbs ..... 31 a 3 J . . . METALS LEAD , je % . j £ s . jt . h . jt . 9 . British Pig Litharge .... 23 10 a 0 0 ( per ton ) .... 21 10 a 21 15 TIM . s . i . s . a . Sheet ( milled ) 22 10 a 22 15 In Blocks .... 92 0 a 92 6 Bar ...... 23 10 a 0 0 Ingots- ....... 93 0 a .-93 6 Patent shot , Bars ...... 94 0 a 94 6 la 12 ...... 24 10 a 0 0 COPPER . Uml , 6 TMininm' 23 10 a 0 0 British CakejP 91 a JT 0 0 White ...... 30 10 a 31 0 Sheets , per lb . 011 a 0 0 " ' ¦¦ ' LEATHER ( per lb . ) a . d , r d . d . Crop HWes , 30 a 401 bs . 10 ial 3 German Horse Hides . . 10 a 21 Ditto , 40 a' Mlus .,.... 12 aI 4 j Spanish Horse Hides .. . 12 a 24 Ditto , 50 a 601 bs . .... 13 a 17 CalfSkins , 30 a 40 lbs . Bull Hides 1 . 0 a' 13 ( dozen . ) ......... .... 14 a 18 Vitriol Butts ,. 16 a 17 Ditto , 40 a 50 lbs ..... . 15 a 21 English Butts .. 14 a 24 Ditto , 50 a 60 lbs ...... 16 a 22 Foreign Butts ........ 14 a 18 Ditto , 70 a 100 lbs .... . 14 a 20 Foreign Hides ......-. JO a 12 Largo Seal Skins ...... 11 a 15 Dressing Hides .. . 11 a 14 Ditto , Small ........... 20 a 22 Ditto , Shaved ......... 12 a " Kips . 10-a 18 BestSaddlers'Hicles ,. 14 a 16 Basils ......... ? a 12 English Horse Hidns .. 10 a 13 Bellies ; ............... 6 a . 8 Shouiders-. i .......... 7 a 13 . SUGAR , COFFEE , COCOA , AND 1 SPICES , j SUGAR . « . d . s . d , COCOA . Large Lumpis . . 73 0 a 74 0 a . d . a . & . Small ditto ... 74 0 ; t 70 0 Trinidad ( per M (> lasses , Britisu 33 < 5 a 34 6 rot . ) ..,,..... 44 0 » 59 . 0 Bengal good and Grenada ...... 44 0 a 54 0 line .. ; ..... 0 0 a 0 0 St . Lucia ¦; .- .. 0 0 ' a 0 0 Barbadoes . Fine 0 0 a 0 0 Brazil ........ 3 i 0 a 38 6 COFFEE . SPICES . Jamaica , Fine 110 0 a 124 0 Cinnamon lb . 3 4 a 7 6 Middling .... 104 0 u 108 0 Cloves ( Am-Ordinary .... 84 0 a 102 0 boyna ) .... 10 a 12 , Dempra ' ra and Do . ( Bourbpn ) 1 Oj a 1 2 Berbicegood Mace ...... 2 8 a 7 0 Middling .. 106 0 a 116 0 Nutmegs ( un-Goodandnhe garb . ) .... ; . 4 10 a 5 0 Ordinary .. 84 0 a 102 0 Pepper ( Cay-Ordinary and enne ) ...... 0 6 a 2 6 Broken .... 69 0 a 82 0 Pmu > nto ( Ja-Dominica , ' maion 0 3 f a 0 4 Middling .. 98 0 a 120 0 Ginger ( Jamaica ) Goodandiine White ...... 80 0 a 130 0 Ordinary .. 80 0 a 96 0 Fine large .. 140 0 a , 210 0 St .: Ddmmgo 42 0 a 44 0 Barbadpes ., 48 0 a 56 0 Mocha ...... 72 0 a 120 0 East India .. 22 0 a 32 . 0 MANCHESTER CORN EXCHANGE , Saturday , March 31 . :. ¦; At our market thw morning there Was , a tolerablr good > show ; of samples , and a fair inquirjp ; lbr ;» U articles ; vWlaeat of prime duality wa 3 sold on q niteasgpod terms as onthia day se nnight , and the trade beinglow in stock of Flour , holders . firmly demanded late ' rates , and for some choice matks rather . higheT prices were obtained . Oats and Oatmeal were in steadyrequest , arid good -.-qualities supported the previous : quotations , The sales made in prime descriptions of Malt and Beana were at full y list week's p rices ,. bnt inferior Bulks were difficult to dispose of without submitting ; to loSver rates . LiyERPOOTj WOOL MARKET , March 28 . English Wool * . —Down ejves and wethers , 13 d to 14 d ; down teg 8 , 15 dti ) 16 d ; combing fleeces , 14 d to 15 d ; combing skin , 13 d to 15 d ; super skin , 14 d to 16 d ; head skin , 12 d to Hdperlb . .- - Scotch Wools .- —Laid Higbland , 9 s Od to 9 s 6 d ; white ditto , Il 8 3 d to 12 s Od ; laid crossed , 12 s Od to 13 s 0 d ; washed ditto , 14 u Od to 15 s 0 d ; laid Cheviot , 14 s Od to 15 s Od ; washed ditto , 16 s Od to 20 s 6 d ; white ditto , 24 s 0 d to 28 s Od per stone of 14 lb . Irish . Wbola .--Iri 8 h fleeceBj mixed Iota , 13 id : to 15 d ; Irish wethera , 13 d to 14 d ; Irwh hogs , 15 d to led ; - Irish combing 8 kin , 13 idto 14 id ; Irish ahortskinv ltd to 13 d per lb . : Foreign Wools . ^ -Rxwsian Wool , 6 di to 7 i ; Odessa , ^ fine , 12 d to 21 d - . ; ' . Buenos Ayres , 3 | d to 4 d ; ¦ : Mogadore and Barbary , 3 d to 4 d ; washed Peruvian , 8 id to 9 Jd ; unwashed ditto ; 6 d to 7 d ; PortugalR ., 10 d to 12 d * ;^ '&tto ; lowmarks , 84 dto 9 Jd ; German ^^ fleeces , 14 d to 16 d ; ditto ' i assorted , . 173 to JJpd ;; ditto , lambs , 18 dto 30 d ; Spanish R . ; 17 d to 22 d ;; ditto F ; S ., 15 d to 22 d ; New Sonth Wales , 12 d to 21 d per lb . LIVERPOOL CATTtE MARKET , Monday , April 2 . : The supply of Beasts at n » rket to-day has been tolerabiy large for the time of the yeari ihany of which were of very good quality , but-we cannot note any alteration- in prices ftpm oui last / week ' a quotations ,. We iave also rud * rery ' moderate suppl y of Shuep , which have been bnt of Jniddling quidity . Tot the time of ^ the yeat | but , in , cpnspqueiice of the great demand fot Mutton taere were but few left unsold ; at -the close of the market , whichj upon the whole , may Reconsidered a' brisk 011 % Good Beerfeadfly sold at above 6 d ; , middling 6 d . j and 3 : veiy fewat 5 jd . Good Wether Mutton sold at l& . j with a few of inferior quality at 6 id .- ^ -Nnmber of Beasts , ^ QOS j Sheejv 3 , 32 a := ' ^ : ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ : ; X . IVJERp 60 L CQTTON MAHi £ JET . - ^ fonaay Evening , Marcn ; 3 i , 183 k' The demand has continued good r . i » ut ' -altf ! ough ' ; th » dwpop-Hon to seUhassbmewhat abated , prices of the fairer and lower qualities-of American have agam given way | d . per lb . j whilst the good fair and good , being scarce , have commanded fall rates . Brazil and Egyptian are widiout ^ cbange . 2 ^ 40 Sutatoffered-ye 8 terday ,. Jby auction * went off Jfwvilyy wtj ; 77 O ; jHmn £ : ;« M ,. ¦ ' »*•^^ ^^ ; f 4 . f ^^» n ^ Ae mfenpr [ qualities ^ Spepulators haye takea \ 4- ^^ Aaait } iea ^^( aiiat ' -. ^ rters 1 , 600 American « nd 100 Surat , ' . ' and there have been jbrwardedinto the country unsbld dunng" &e month , 5 , 200 ^ m ' eri <» B , ' 250 fP < 'riuunnn < : 9 a »* 'JSO Egyptian . ; The saleai wWcb ainouitto 2 > , d 30 bale 8 / con 8 istof-- ; . ' , , * ; t j > ' ¦ -. ;?• ¦ ' . ;; ; ' : ¦ ¦ - ¦> d . - ; - . 7 s ^ ' ¦ ¦' ' : 'i- ' - ¦ : ::, ' - ' : & : ¦ : ' ¦ ¦ % ¦ 290 Seai 8 land ....., 15 JU > 36 , 5 WBah& &Mac * 7-foi'M 70 StaineddoV ..-.. 0 ' : to 13 30 Demerara , &c ... 9 :. to 12 l ( ' 6970 Bowed Geori . i 5 } to 81 73 ^ EgypUan ; .. ... 8 itojl 2 l . i ~ An ); Mobile . ; ,... 5 f to 8 f - r-Barbadow : * i .. 6 ; <*> :- ? ¥ f * S Al » t » ma , 4 c 5 * \ o 6 | 4 ())> eru > ian . U .,-, i' 71 to , 8 J , 9810 New Orleans . i 5 j to » 70 Laguayra i to' 2 , toAI Pernambucoj 160 W * stIndia '¦ -i- -6 j -t « 'ra' '" " f Paraiba , &c . 8 J to 10 203 OSnrat ; ...... > 3 | to : 5 | 1 fiA 5 Maranham .. «* to 94 / 70 Madras ........ 4 . to 0 % tw fSawginhed .. 7 to 8 j —Bengal ........ 33 to 5 the import * for the week ar « 33 , 716 bags .
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< Comparative view of the Import * and Exports of Cotton into arid from the whole kingdoin , from the 1 st ofJanuarf to the 24 th inst . and of the Imports and Exports for tbe . sapieperiodiastyear . \\ ' ¦'¦' . ' .-. ¦' ¦ ¦ ¦ \ " ¦ . ¦ ¦' ..- •' . Into" the kingdom this year : ; . American ........ . Vbags 329 , 186 V . ; : South American .. .. .. .. ,. ' :. 35 , 9 W >» . West Indies , pemeraraVo f C ,.. ' - " ' ¦ 403 East Indies .. ^ . ...... .. 6 , 049 ^ Egypt , < fec .. .. ,. .. .. .. 11 , 443
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- Total of all descriptions .. .. .. 382 , 981 . :. Same period last year : American .... .. bags 228 , 198 ¦ South . American .. ' .. .. 37 , 056 . WestlndieSiDemerara , Ac . . : 637 ' .- 1 East Indies .... ..... . . 31 , 489 ' . ' EgyP * T * c .. - i . "¦; ., ¦ - ' . - , 3 ^ 64 . - " ¦ ' ; V ¦; ;; : ; . // ' : ¦ -.. "V ¦¦ - ¦ . - . : - . . ' ¦¦ SOl jgii . - Increase of imports as compared - - . . / with ; same penodlast year , bags 81 , 737
EXPORTS IN 1838 . American , 3 , 422- ^—Brazil , 25- ^ j—East Indies , 1 , 674 >' Total in 1838 ... ; .. 4 , 821 tags . ¦ Same period in 1837 .. . > . 17 ^ 08 " , Thereliaabeen more ' activity : in the market to-day than last week , 4 , 000 bags have been sold , and the demand apparently would have carried-off double the quantity had Cotton offered at the prices of last week . The sales , on . Saturdajr were 3 , 000 bags . \ : . / V : : : . ' . ¦ :: ¦ ' ; ¦ _' : _ : ' : ' ¦¦' . ¦ . . The demand for Sugar has at length improved , and prices have in : some- degree recovered from the depression noticed last week . The sales of British Plantation are ^ however , confined to 600 fehds . as theTe are not many offering ; but in
Bengal and Mauritius : . the transactions have been extensive amounting t « 4 , 000 bags < jf the former , at 62 s . 6 d to 64 s 6 d for low to good white , and 65 s to 66 s 6 d , l ' or fin * , and 5 , 000 mat * Mauritius , at 6 la to 64 s per cwt . The transactions in foreign Sngarcohsistof 300 bags Manilla , at 20 s 9 d ; and 8 , 130 bag 3 Lima , at 21 a 6 d for low moist brown , to 25 s 6 d for fair yellow . In Molasses , 130 punens . Berbice , via Halifax , have been sold , but the . price has not been allowed to transpire .: ' . " The market continues barely supplied with suitable qualities of Plantation Coffee ; the only transaction compriaei 250 brls . Trinidad , and wKich sold ' at rather lower rates . Nothing done in foreign . 100 bags Trinidad Cocoa sold at the quotations , a small lot of
Pimento at 3 ^ u , 100 bag * black Pepper at 4 | d per lb n and 65 robins of inferior East India Ginger at 21 s 6 d per cwt . Carolina Rice haa been more in request , and 220 tcea . haye been sold to the trade , at 348 per cwt . duty paid . No : salestepoTted in East India . Very-little business / has been done in . Rum , the sales beihgeonnned to about 50 . punchs . at former rates . - ; Of , the vast quantity of East , India Drysaltery articlesbrought to public sale this week , onlythe following were disposed of : viz . 110 chests Lac Dye , of various marks , at lid to 2 s 6 d per lb . ; 70 chests Shiell Lac at 80 s to 87 s 6 d ; 100 chests-Gain Arabic , at 29 a for broiro to 62 rf for iine quality ; 35 cheats Gum Animi at j ( S' 4 2 s 6 d to jt' 7 and 33 a forsiftings ; 35 bates Bengal Safflowpj atit-4 2 s 6 d to J 5 7 s 6 dj 12 hhds . Tincal » t 56 s' 6 d to 58 s 3 d perewt . ; 3 tons Terri Japonica at jf 25 pjr ton ; 45 bales Munjeet at 14 s to 15 s per cwt . ; 3 chests Manilla Indigo at 4 s' 5 d to 4 s lOd per lb . ' and 524 bores Cassia Ligneaat 5 Ssto 59 s . Nearly l ^ Oo bags of Saltpetre are reported j at 20 s for low quality , and 28 s 6 d for fine . 500 bags Nitrate of Soda have been sold at 15 s .
D . yE > vpops . —The sales of all descriptions have only , been to a moderate extent , and consisted principally of 50 tons of Campeachy Logwood at 4 ?; 150 tons of Savanilla , Fustic » t jth 5 s , and some Barwpod , at steady rates . The demand for Turpentine has improved , and an advance of 6 d per cwt . haa been given '; 138 has been paid for 1 , 000 brls . of iair quality , and 13 s 5 d to 13 s 6 d for 40 o brls . of good quality ; , the maTket is firin at this aavance . ; No sales in Tar . ; Wbntreal Pot and Pearl Ashes go flff very slowly , in small parcels , and present quotations are noteasily obtained . Quercitron Bark contmuea BcaTce , tiut is not in much request . American Flaxseed , for sowing , is in good demand , and several parcels have been disr posedof at " 70 s ; nothing done in Cloveroeed .:: There : have been-no public sales of hides thw week , andthose by private arecpnfined to 1 , 700 salted New Orlcans , at 3 jdto 3 Jd per lb . The ' sales ot Tobacco are about 90 hhds . chiefly stemmed , to the "home tirade , . . : : The market for Brimstone still continues very dull ; scarcely
ah inquiry this week , : yet no alteratida : can be noticed in the E rices . There has been a little demand for Shtunac , and 300 ags Sicily hare realised 14 s to 146 ( id , and 150 bags Tyroleie 10 i 6 d per cwt . A few sales have been , made in Cream of Tartar at 60 s to 628 per cwt ., andthe market ia almost bare _ of thw article . No sales in Madders orMadder Roots . In Olive Oil , tlie sales are 25 tuns at the quotations .. In Fish Oils , tlie businessis still confined to Cod , of whichabout 50 tuns Nefvfoundhind-have lieen sold at rather higher rates , and holders now ask a uirther advance : Seal Oil ia without demand , Soine parcels of Linseed Oil have been sold sit the quotations ; in pale Rape , little doing .. The transactions in Palm . Oil this week are to the extent of about 100 tuns on the spot j at jC 45 to Jtip nothing jiow offering ; under the latter . jirice ; for . arrival , no salesetlected . / Some busmess ha 3 been done in Oil of Turpentine -at our- qudtations , and higher rates ; are now . demanded . The sales of i ' etersburgli . clean and out-shot Heuip are to the extent of Tibout 130 tons ; 100 bales Jute sold at jf 12 153 per ton . A moderate business is doing in Tailow , at our quotations . ¦ ' . ' . '¦''' ¦ .- . ' . ' -. ' - ¦ . ¦¦ .- ¦ ¦ . ¦ ¦ . ' ¦¦¦ . '^ - . ¦¦ . ¦" ¦ ' V- '¦ ' .
From Friday Night's Gazette, March 30 Bankrupts. I
FROM FRIDAy NIGHT'S GAZETTE , March 30 BANKRUPTS . I
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RICHARD CLARK , Bognor , Sussex , hotel keeper , to surrender April 6 , at one o ' clock , May lly at twelve , att ^ e Bankrupts' Court , Solicitor , Mr . Lock , Surrey-street , Strand - ollicial assignee , . Mr ; Turquahd , CopthaU-buildLngs , Throgmorton-stxeet . . . '¦" . - . - ¦¦¦¦ -.= . . | THOMAS ROBSON , East-cheap , operative cnymist , April 5 , Mtiv 11 , at 11 o ' clock , at tne Bankrupts Court . SoHcitdry Mr . Crosby ,. Church-court , Old Jewry ; ofiicialassignee , Mr . Pennell , ; Basinghall-streeti ¦¦ ¦• : i FRIEND LAWRENCE , New-cut , Lower Marsh , Lambeth ,, general dealer v April 5 , Slay 11 , at twelve' o ' clock , at the Ba « krupU' -cburt . Solicitor , Air . S p ^ er , Broad-streetr buildings ; ollicial assignee , Mr . Abl ) ott , King ' s Anns yard . ANGIJS MORRISON , Watford , Hertfordshire , / grocer , April 10 , at twelve o ' clock , May 11 , at eleven , at theBankrupt'n . court . Solicitor , Mr . Dods , NoTthumberland-stfeet , Strand ; . official assignee , Mr , Alsagar , Birchin-lane , Cornhill . ¦ . ' ¦¦ ¦ - ¦ . '! .- - ' ¦ : ' •• • . ¦ . - ¦¦ .- •' - ¦ .- - .. . -
RICHARD FRANCIS WEBB , Wellclose-sqaare , Whitechapel , snip chandler , Apr il 10 , at one o ' clock , May II , at twelve , at the Bankrupts' Court . Solicitors , Messrs . Swan and Martin , Little James-street , Bedford row ; official assignee , lUr . Grpom , Abchutch-lane . : JONAS STEAD , Armley , Forksliu-e ,: cloth , manufacturer , April 7 , May 11 , at . eleven o ' clock , at the Court House , Leeds . Solicitors , Messrs . Makinsonj and Sanders , Middle Temple . - - . ' - .- ' . . " , ' ¦ ¦ ROBERT MACK MORNEMENT , Burnnam Westgate , Norfolk , groct ! r , April : 8 , May 11 , at ten o ' clock , at the Crown Inn , Fakenham , Solicitors , Messrs . Wood and Blake , yal ; ebn-streety Aldersgate-Street . - : - ¦ - JOHN AIAYj New-port , Isle of Wight , Hampshire , mercei , Aprii 9 , May 11 , at twelve o ' clock , at the Bugle Inn , New *
port . Soucitors , Messrs . Fosters ana livans , Rayinond-bu 2 dincs . GTa . y ' 3-inn . ' .:. ' JOHN XORDEN , and NATHANIEL HADLEY , Herne bay , Kent , builderg , ; April 17 , May 11 , at eleven . o'clock , at the Guidhall , Canterbury . ; Solicitor , Mr . Kaye , Symond ' a inn , ChancerV-lane . . / . . " CHARLES HENRY ROWE , Cheltenham , Glocestershire woollen draper , April 14 , May 11 , at three o ' clock , at the Royal Hotel , Cheltenham ; : Solicitor , Mr . Pope , Gray ^ -inasquare . .:. '¦¦;¦ ¦ - . -- . -- . .. ¦ . -. ¦¦ .. "¦ THOMAS HOOD , Birmingham , currier , April 1 ; May . 11 , at twelve o ' clock , at Dee ' s Rpj ^ l / Hotel , Birmingham ; Solicitor , Mr : Chaplin ^ Gray ' . vinn-square . " : ' JOHN HENDERSON , High Crosbr , Cumberland , horse dealer , April 10 , May 11 , at 11 o ' clock , at the Crown and Mitre Inn , Carlis . e . Solicitors , Messrs . Capes and Stuart , Bedfordrrow . .: ¦ ¦
WILLIAAI ROUTLEDGE , Oakshaw , Cumberland , cattledealer , April ,- 10 , May 11 , at eleven o ' clock , ; at the Crown and Mitre Inn , ¦" , Carlisle , Solicitors , Messrs . Capes and Stuart , Bedford-rew . -.: > / ' : . ,: ADA " M SCOTT , Stourbriage , Wdrcestersbire , builder , April 14 , May 11 , at two o ' clock , at the Vine Inn , Stourbridge ,. Solicitors , ; Messrs . Clowes and Wedlake , Eng's Bench-walk , TemWe .: -.. ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ : ¦ ¦ - - ¦ .- ¦ . ¦' . /¦ ¦ .:,. ¦ ¦ . ¦ :. " :. . - . WILLIAM WALKER , KingBton-upon-Hull , wareh 6 u 3 emati , Aptil 18 , May 11 , at eleven o ' clock , at the Seorgelnn , Kingston-upon-HuU . Solicitors , Messrs , fRpsser , and So ; n-i Gray ' s-inn-place , Gray ' s-inn . . : . : "
DIVIDENDS . j . ; . April , 25 , —J Walmsley , Heaton Norris , Leneaahire , cotton spinner . April 26 . — W . Wahnsley , - Heaton Norriai Lancashire , '' < otton spinner , April 18 , R . Jones , Liverpool / gTocer ; April 23 . —W ., Bolton , York , ; lmen-draper , April 33 . —A . Birka , . Manchester , linen draper . ' April 23 . —R . W ; Rush-. woTth ,: Manchester , merchant , : / : ¦ , ' CERTIFICATES—AVRIL 20 . V S . Burke , Liverpool-, coal dealer . . / - '' ¦ N
PABTNSBSHIPS DISSOLVED . Granam aha Calvert , kingston-upon-Hall , eagravera . Haigh and Wood , Halifax , Yorkshire ^ woplstaplers . F . Hudson and Co ., Huddersfield , l * en drapers . J . Hamer and Son , Walmsley , Lancashire , stone dealers . / E . Green , andCo ., t »» dealers , and V ; : MlLiean-atid : Co ., cigar ' merchants , Liverpool . HvttUia and Ephraim , Liverpool , jewellers , Onghton , Son , and Co ., Manchester andNewtonheath , siflcmanulacturera Riley , Brook , and X ! o . ' , Huddersfield , Rfley , Brooks , and Kiev , King * Arms yar& i and W . Brook and ^ ons , Dessan andjyiagdmirgu , Germany , merchants ^ ; as far as regards J . H . Rfley , 1 , Roebuck and Sons , Leeds , fancy Btufl merchants ; a » far a » Tegarda W . Roebuck .
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FROM THE tQNDQN GAZETTE , Apbii , X ; .. ' . ; . " ¦' ;¦ ¦ , "' . / ' - ' . INSOLVENT . - , ¦ ' <¦ . ¦ ¦ ' ¦ : . ' :.. ¦ ;;; ¦ , - ¦ . ¦¦ . ¦ . ' . . ' ¦ March . 29 ;—William Davey , Birmingham , spoon nianufa March 29 . —Edward Russell Bell , Hoxton Old-town , and Wellington-street , Southwark , common-brewer .
., - \ S ¦ >¦ ¦¦ - . ' , - . . BANKRUPTS . , / .. / . ' - ¦ ANDREW BROWNj lawman , Regeht-sireet , Middlesex , tosurrender , ' April . 9 , at one , and Ma ^ 15 , at eleven , at the Court of bankruptcy . Lackington , ofhcial assignee , Basmghall-atteetj Parkenand . Webs ^ T , New Boiwell-courf , CareystreehLincoln ' s !!!!!^^ . ? .. „ , . JOHN ^ WQODHOUSB v Viehialler , Stafford , April 18 , and May 15 , it ^ eleven , ai the New Hotel , Woiyerhampton . Alger , Beaford-row . Lbndon ; Rogers , Stourbnage , ys _ orcester . JOHN ¦ WlNPBJt , tobacconist , Bedfordbury , Apr * K , at Wlf-past twelve , andJVIay 15 , * y- %$ ^ . P £££ ? ^^^^^ O ^ gS ^ , ^^^ % ^^ s ^ , ^^ & ] ls ^'^^^^ m ^^^^^ ^^ ^ titfXia ni ^ DWINlaercW , miftirk *^^
- ; I j t ! S I i i ' . ^ T ^ p ^ Lot ^ o ^; J . Ma ^ o ^ , Bl » c »^ - «^^ i ^ llBmCT ^ I hSlHittwt ; Beftneri . OfficMdi&Bfflgiiee ?^ ^ . Wi Wjlfama , AM ^ place , Bedford-square , iV / w - ¦'• - ¦ ' i .- ¦ jiAR * . THOMAS JOHNSONi draper , Knaresboropgn , April 2 f » na May ; 15 , at eleven , at the Court-asuse , Lee ° " 5 Jo ^ 5 ? Son' WeatheraU , Temple , London ; C . » d G . H Wood ,, Manchester . ,- . : ¦/¦ -. / :
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apbii 7 , 1838 .. ¦ ...:. , ' ,: ' ¦ ' - .. . v ' - "¦ ¦ ' / :. : ; : ?^ : ^ W % W > &M !! & : ^ ti ; M ^ ' -:-- ^ : ? it : iM fy ^; -.
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), April 7, 1838, page 7, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct689/page/7/
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